5 good reasons to Snourbasfoi: As egg producers, you know there are a lot of loose ends to he together m order to run a successful busi ness. “Where should 1 buy my , pullets?”, “Am I buying the best feeds?”, “Am I paying the right price?”, “Where will I market my eggs?”, and so on and so on Plain and Fancy Ag Enterprises, with main offices in Elizabethtown, offer you a complete service oriented production and egg marketing program that not only answers these questions, but guaran tees the solutions, leaving you with more important things to do like deciding how to spend your money Here’s a quick look at Plain and Fancy’s total profits oriented program 1. Complete line pf specially formulated pullet feeds,. Backed by many years of research and field testing and our nationally known nutritionist, we have produced feeds with unequalled results Plain and tamv Ag 1 m 1m .H D 3, Lliiabethioun Pa 17022 and Rll I I amaqua Pa 18232 O NUTRITIOUS Elizabeth can have her ceremonious British throne and Buckingham Palace. Juhanne of Holland may rule over her peaceful Ddfch canals and fields of brilliant tulips. And Princess Grace may keep her Monaco and its Junior Cooking Edition (Continued from Page 86) CHOCOLATE FANTASY CAKE 1% cups Cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon x k cup cocoa V-h. cups granulated sugar % cup shortening l k cup cooled strong coffee % cup buttermilk or sour milk 2 eggs, unbeaten Sift together the dry ingredients Cut the shortening into the dry ingredients, until crumbs form. Add the coffee and Vs cup buttermilk. Beat 150 strokes Add the remaining buttermilk and two eggs. Beat enough to blend ingredients thoroughly. Pour into two nine inch greased layer pans. Bake at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes. This is a dark, rich chocolate cake. 2. Complete line of amino acid balanced layer feeds. With the help of our nutritionist, we have de veloped layer feeds that can help lower the cost per dozen eggs. 3. Contract pullet production. We have contract farms that grow the pullets under our supervision, guaranteeing the quality of your layers 4. Contract eggiwhite and brown) production. Right now we have the openings for 300,000 contract layers New facilities invited. 5. Complete egg marketing program. We will guarantee to buy your eggs, stamp them USDA In spec ted and market them within our seven-state area If you think our basket is good enough to put your eggs into, call us at 717 665 5927 (day), or Marlin Hershey at 717 394 9638 (after 5) and, we’ll discuss making you more money ENT inc glittery gambling tables and night life. I have my own throne, thank you, and wouldn’t trade with any of those modem monarchs. My throne is a dusty, vinyl-covered one. It sits high atop a tractor, green or Barbara E. Glick Age 13, Quanyville, Pa. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 19,1979 Lancaster Co . farm management contest The Lancaster County Solanco, and Steve Hershey, FFA Farm Management Manheim Central; 4th Contest was held recently at Stanley Vasco, Solanco; sth, Willow Street Vo-Tech Jere Rutt, Elizabethtown; School. Terry Greenleaf, a 6th, Hans Groff, Ephrata; senior at Solanco High 7th, Donald Good, Ephrata; School, placed first in the Bth, Jeff DeLong, Solanco; contest. Terry, son of Mr. 9th, Mike Rhoads, Solanco and Mrs. Ed Greenleaf of' 10th, Clyde Peters, Manheim Kirkwood, compded a total Central; 11th, David score of 179 out of a possible Fanner, Manheim Central 202. He is employed by his and 12th, Ray Gruber, father at Ag Industrial Manheim Central. Equipment, Inc. of Rising The contest is designed to Sun, Md. test the students’ knowledge Other participating in the of basic farm management contest and them placmgs principles and analysis of a were: 2nd (tie) Tom Kird, given farming operation. red, surrounded by greasy hydraulic levers, gearshifts, throttles, gauges, and pedals. From it, I, a mere woman, can maneuver with the power of several dozen horses and perform tasks that were once just an ag engmeer’s dream. In the confines of this throne I can survey a mini kingdom of rolling contoured fields of green and brown, contented Holstems resting in the shade of the pasture while the heifers wade at the edge of the pond, the giant cluster of Norway maples that envelopes the house and the shining silver of the sun on the barn roof. Behind my throne, the disc turns dead and shredded corn stubble under fresh brown earth to prepare for another season of waving held corn fields. Occasionally, the daydreaming is' interrupted by a diplomatic corps of visitors, seagulls descending from the blue skies of May to squabble in the machinery’s wake of freshly dug worms and insects. Ruling monarchs are welcome to wrestle with matters of state, trade pacts, military maneuvers, civil unrest, territorial visits and legislative affairs that ac company their birthright to the throne. I’d much rather share in the rewarding stewardship of the kingdom of soil and seed, planting and harvest, fresh air, sunshine and warm ram, and of the production of that most precious essence of life; food for a hungry world. 87
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers